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FBI Celebrates That It Prevented FBI's Own Bomb Plot

Started by December 07, 2010 04:48 AM
48 comments, last by LessBread 13 years, 11 months ago
Quote: Original post by Erik Rufelt
Quote: Original post by Don Carnage
It's not like an undercover hooker or drug bust. This is taking advantage of sick people, gambling with civilian lives, corrupting the legal system, and not doing anything to prevent (real) terror.


If you read the article linked from the OP you'll see that they never gave him the opportunity to actually detonate a bomb.
Quote: On Tuesday, according to the affidavit, Mr. Mohamud and the undercover agents met again for final preparations, loading what seemed like parts of a bomb into a vehicle, planning details of the operation.



The suspect was also actively seeking terrorist training long before the FBI got involved, and had contact to foreign terrorists. The article also explains how the undercover agents gave him several opportunities to back out or help his cause through other means, while the guy insisted on carrying out an attack.
Quote: The agent asked: “You know there’s gonna be a lot of children there?”

Mr. Mohamud replied: “Yeah, I mean that’s what I’m looking for.”


Someone so determined to kill people will find a way, unless stopped.


Yes, I get all that. I don't believe potential murderers should just be left alone to plot their evil deeds. But I'm afraid that some methods used in this fight may be counter productive, and even more concerned that the freedoms and rights that have been stripped from all citizens in the name of WOT, is not exactly helping the human race forward.
It is I, the spectaculous Don Karnage! My bloodthirsty horde is on an intercept course with you. We will be shooting you and looting you in precisely... Ten minutes. Felicitations!
Quote: Original post by Don Carnage
I don't believe potential murderers should just be left alone to plot their evil deeds.


Glad we agree here!

Quote: Original post by Don Carnage
But I'm afraid that some methods used in this fight may be counter productive...


OK, then what would you suggest the FBI do when a potential terrorist goes to someone looking for help with a terrorist plot (maybe the word terrorist is overused these day, but it is fitting here) and that person informs the FBI? Should the FBI tap his phone, dig through his trash, bug his computer and wait for him to act? There is now no question as to his intent. A defense lawyer is going to have a very hard time getting him off.

Quote: Original post by Don Carnage
...and even more concerned that the freedoms and rights that have been stripped from all citizens in the name of WOT, is not exactly helping the human race forward.


Whether this point has any merit or not, it doesn't fit in with this discussion. His rights were not violated. He was actively searching for a means to an end and was given multiple chances to end the plot. He wanted to see it to its end. He was not forced or coerced. He was not entrapped.

No, I am not a professional programmer. I'm just a hobbyist having fun...

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One thing lost in this discussion is that following the arrest of Mohamed Osman Mohamud an actual terrorist attack occurred. A mosque that he attended intermittently was fire bombed and sustained considerable damage. There hasn't been much word in the media about how hard the FBI is working to find those actual terrorists. It appears that stories about actual terrorism don't fit into their predefined narratives. And the FBI is happier mugging for the cameras after they entrap a teenager than they are getting to work on actual terrorism. They appear to want to hold onto the lead role in this season of "security theater".

Greenwald raises many salient objections to the arrest. His third point is most germane to this discussion.

Quote:
...
Third, there are ample facts that call into question whether Mohamud's actions were driven by the FBI's manipulation and pressure rather than his own predisposition to commit a crime. In June, he attempted to fly to Alaska in order to work on a fishing job he obtained through a friend, but he was on the Government's no-fly list. That caused the FBI to question him at the airport and then bar him from flying to Alaska, and thus prevented him from earning income with this job (para. 25). Having prevented him from working, the money the FBI then pumped him with -- including almost $3,000 in cash for him to rent his own apartment (para. 61) -- surely helped make him receptive to their suggestions and influence. And every other step taken to perpetrate this plot -- from planning its placement to assembling the materials to constructing the bomb -- was all done at the FBI's behest and with its indispensable support and direction.

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...



"I thought what I'd do was, I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes." - the Laughing Man
Quote: Original post by LessBread

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...


None of that matters, because he is a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition. He attempted to carry out a bomb plot up to the point of actually detonating a bomb. Having no criminal record prior to attempting murder means nothing.
Far as I can tell, intel agencies and law enforcement is the only effective way to deal with these sorts of things, and it does seem to be, if it's not perfect.

I don't buy that the reason for the lack of terrorists attacks since 9/11 is "only morons hate America enough".

Someone is doing something right.

Unless it's thanks to the Iraq war or airport security - and somehow I doubt it's thanks to either of those things - it's thanks to intel agencies.

Even the printer-bomb shipping deal was caught by intelligence work (longer story short).

The important thing in my mind is to have a check & balance against overzealous law enforcement - someone who can look at a case of some loser who let himself be peer pressured into it and say "OK, we'll show you some degree of mercy". (I wouldn't for the teenager, but I've read about other cases where I would if I were the judge.)

That's why the rendition flights, holding people without trial, etc. is so terrible. What the cops bring in has to be validated by a decently wise person who isn't thinking about a quota, PR or the next election. That's what a decent chunk of the Bill of Rights is there for.

Trials, juries, all that good stuff.
Didn't he try to make contact with someone in the tribal regions of Pakistan?

This sounds like the tip of the spear to me. No history of violence or camp training? Well, the same could have been said about the 9/11 hijackers or most suicide bombers in the middle east and elsewhere -- until they went and did those things. Al Shabab has a history of attempting to recruit young Somalis in the US for their terror campaigns and I believe some have made their way to Somalia.

One has to wonder what drives these numbskulls to hate the society that saved their sorry asses. The Ethiopians seem to be quite a bit better behaved and integrated. I wonder why?
----Bart
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Quote: Original post by ibebrett
Quote: Original post by LessBread

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...


None of that matters, because he is a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition. He attempted to carry out a bomb plot up to the point of actually detonating a bomb. Having no criminal record prior to attempting murder means nothing.


Yes, none of that matters to a lynch mob. He was a 19 year old kid roped into a fictitious plot hatched by the FBI, not "a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition." Don't buy into the hysteria.

For contrast, here's what happens when the FBI targets an adult rather than an angry teenager. Their plot blows up in their face.

FBI plant banned by mosque – because he was too extreme (7 December 2010)

Quote:
...
The terror case Monteilh had been helping build against Ahmadullah Niazi, the brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden's bodyguard, collapsed in September, when the bungling informant revealed that his FBI handlers had instructed him to entrap his potential target and told him that "Islam is a threat to our national security".

Yesterday, as details of his efforts to persuade Niazi to blow up buildings became public, leading US Muslim organisations said they have suspended all contact with the FBI in protest against the excesses of agents who are secretly, and in some cases illegally, monitoring mosques.

"The community feels betrayed," Shakeel Syed, executive director of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California, an umbrella group of more than 75 mosques, told The Washington Post. "They got a guy, a bona fide criminal, and obviously trained him and sent him to infiltrate mosques... It's like a soap opera, for God's sake."

Monteilh, who had previously served time in prison for forgery, says he was recruited on his release in 2006 by FBI agents, who he met in doughnut shops and Starbucks outlets. After being given the code name "Oracle", he was told to root out radicals among the region's 500,000 practising Muslims.
...
In May 2007, Monteilh recorded a conversation in which he suggested to Niazi and another young man that they blow up buildings. Niazi appeared to agree with the idea, and the tape was subsequently used as evidence in the terror case against him.

However, it now seems that Niazi had simply been attempting to humour someone he regarded as a dangerous extremist. Indeed, he was so concerned by "al-Aziz's" attempts to plot an attack that he reported it to community leaders, who passed details to police and took out a restraining order to prevent him from entering the Islamic centre.
...


There's more about this here: Tension grows between Calif. Muslims, FBI after informant infiltrates mosque (December 5, 2010)



"I thought what I'd do was, I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes." - the Laughing Man
Quote: Original post by LessBread
One thing lost in this discussion is that following the arrest of Mohamed Osman Mohamud an actual terrorist attack occurred. A mosque that he attended intermittently was fire bombed and sustained considerable damage. There hasn't been much word in the media about how hard the FBI is working to find those actual terrorists. It appears that stories about actual terrorism don't fit into their predefined narratives. And the FBI is happier mugging for the cameras after they entrap a teenager than they are getting to work on actual terrorism. They appear to want to hold onto the lead role in this season of "security theater".

Greenwald raises many salient objections to the arrest. His third point is most germane to this discussion.

Quote:
...
Third, there are ample facts that call into question whether Mohamud's actions were driven by the FBI's manipulation and pressure rather than his own predisposition to commit a crime. In June, he attempted to fly to Alaska in order to work on a fishing job he obtained through a friend, but he was on the Government's no-fly list. That caused the FBI to question him at the airport and then bar him from flying to Alaska, and thus prevented him from earning income with this job (para. 25). Having prevented him from working, the money the FBI then pumped him with -- including almost $3,000 in cash for him to rent his own apartment (para. 61) -- surely helped make him receptive to their suggestions and influence. And every other step taken to perpetrate this plot -- from planning its placement to assembling the materials to constructing the bomb -- was all done at the FBI's behest and with its indispensable support and direction.

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...


OK, first off, this article makes it sound like he committed this because he couldn't get to Alaska to get a job. Two issues here...
1.) Can I assume that he was unable to get even menial work in Oregon? He couldn't get anything? Not even a job at McDonald's or Walmart? NOTHING?
2.) It is safe to assume that he was on the no-fly list due to this plot. So, would it also be safe to assume that any money earned would have gone to this plot? If the FBI were not informed, and he succeeded in getting that job, what would the consequences have been?

The last paragraph seems to be the final nail in the coffin pertaining to the obvious attempt by the FBI to entrap him. However, it is very clear that he could not have done this on his own. That is the whole point. He tried to seek help and that help then turned him over to the FBI. If the FBI wasn't directing him, it is very much possible that he would have gotten a hold of someone that shared his beliefs and had the resources. It would have delayed the timing, but there are plenty of outdoor events throughout the year that would have sufficed.

What people seem to be missing here is that up until the point of him committing an actual act, there was little to charge him with. At any prior point in the investigation, an arrest would have netted conspiracy charges at best and there would have been a very good chance that he wouldn't have been convicted of that.

Should the FBI use this tactic in every case? No, of course not! It wouldn't have worked in the 9/11 attack simply because of the complexity. However, I can see no fault in this in this or similar cases. A jury now will not have to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, simply because his actions left absolutely no doubt of his intent.

Something else that needs to be pointed out is that when the FBI does an investigation, they create a massive and meticulous paper trail. EVERYTHING has been documented from the initial contact from the informant to the time of the arrest, in detail. It would be asinine to expect law enforcement to share all of this information with the public. We have been fed just enough to know and nothing more. That is how it should be.


Quote: Original post by LessBread
Quote: Original post by ibebrett
Quote: Original post by LessBread

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...


None of that matters, because he is a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition. He attempted to carry out a bomb plot up to the point of actually detonating a bomb. Having no criminal record prior to attempting murder means nothing.


Yes, none of that matters to a lynch mob. He was a 19 year old kid roped into a fictitious plot hatched by the FBI, not "a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition." Don't buy into the hysteria.

For contrast, here's what happens when the FBI targets an adult rather than an angry teenager. Their plot blows up in their face.

FBI plant banned by mosque – because he was too extreme (7 December 2010)

Quote:
...
The terror case Monteilh had been helping build against Ahmadullah Niazi, the brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden's bodyguard, collapsed in September, when the bungling informant revealed that his FBI handlers had instructed him to entrap his potential target and told him that "Islam is a threat to our national security".

Yesterday, as details of his efforts to persuade Niazi to blow up buildings became public, leading US Muslim organisations said they have suspended all contact with the FBI in protest against the excesses of agents who are secretly, and in some cases illegally, monitoring mosques.

"The community feels betrayed," Shakeel Syed, executive director of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California, an umbrella group of more than 75 mosques, told The Washington Post. "They got a guy, a bona fide criminal, and obviously trained him and sent him to infiltrate mosques... It's like a soap opera, for God's sake."

Monteilh, who had previously served time in prison for forgery, says he was recruited on his release in 2006 by FBI agents, who he met in doughnut shops and Starbucks outlets. After being given the code name "Oracle", he was told to root out radicals among the region's 500,000 practising Muslims.
...
In May 2007, Monteilh recorded a conversation in which he suggested to Niazi and another young man that they blow up buildings. Niazi appeared to agree with the idea, and the tape was subsequently used as evidence in the terror case against him.

However, it now seems that Niazi had simply been attempting to humour someone he regarded as a dangerous extremist. Indeed, he was so concerned by "al-Aziz's" attempts to plot an attack that he reported it to community leaders, who passed details to police and took out a restraining order to prevent him from entering the Islamic centre.
...


There's more about this here: Tension grows between Calif. Muslims, FBI after informant infiltrates mosque (December 5, 2010)


You are taking some mistakes by the FBI and some of its agents in some investigations as an indictment of the agency and its investigations as a whole. This argument is so absurd I simply will not comment on it further.

No, I am not a professional programmer. I'm just a hobbyist having fun...

Quote: Original post by MarkS
Quote: Original post by LessBread
One thing lost in this discussion is that following the arrest of Mohamed Osman Mohamud an actual terrorist attack occurred. A mosque that he attended intermittently was fire bombed and sustained considerable damage. There hasn't been much word in the media about how hard the FBI is working to find those actual terrorists. It appears that stories about actual terrorism don't fit into their predefined narratives. And the FBI is happier mugging for the cameras after they entrap a teenager than they are getting to work on actual terrorism. They appear to want to hold onto the lead role in this season of "security theater".

Greenwald raises many salient objections to the arrest. His third point is most germane to this discussion.

Quote:
...
Third, there are ample facts that call into question whether Mohamud's actions were driven by the FBI's manipulation and pressure rather than his own predisposition to commit a crime. In June, he attempted to fly to Alaska in order to work on a fishing job he obtained through a friend, but he was on the Government's no-fly list. That caused the FBI to question him at the airport and then bar him from flying to Alaska, and thus prevented him from earning income with this job (para. 25). Having prevented him from working, the money the FBI then pumped him with -- including almost $3,000 in cash for him to rent his own apartment (para. 61) -- surely helped make him receptive to their suggestions and influence. And every other step taken to perpetrate this plot -- from planning its placement to assembling the materials to constructing the bomb -- was all done at the FBI's behest and with its indispensable support and direction.

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...


OK, first off, this article makes it sound like he committed this because he couldn't get to Alaska to get a job. Two issues here...
1.) Can I assume that he was unable to get even menial work in Oregon? He couldn't get anything? Not even a job at McDonald's or Walmart? NOTHING?
2.) It is safe to assume that he was on the no-fly list due to this plot. So, would it also be safe to assume that any money earned would have gone to this plot? If the FBI were not informed, and he succeeded in getting that job, what would the consequences have been?


No that article does not make it sound like his motivation was revenge for begin barred from travel to Alaska to take a job, it makes it sound like the FBI interfered with his life in order to push him into their trap. Whether he could get a job at McDonalds or what not in Portland is irrelevant. Moreover, it's not safe to assume that he was on the no-fly list due to this plot. That assumption overlooks Greenwald's first point. It's safer to assume he was on the no-fly list because of the emails he sent to Pakistan. Those emails put him on the FBI's radar but they don't constitute a plot. Furthermore, the fact that he was the only person arrested is a clear indication that the plot was cooked up by the FBI and that without the FBI there was no plot, just an angry teenager.

Quote: Original post by MarkS
The last paragraph seems to be the final nail in the coffin pertaining to the obvious attempt by the FBI to entrap him. However, it is very clear that he could not have done this on his own. That is the whole point. He tried to seek help and that help then turned him over to the FBI. If the FBI wasn't directing him, it is very much possible that he would have gotten a hold of someone that shared his beliefs and had the resources. It would have delayed the timing, but there are plenty of outdoor events throughout the year that would have sufficed.


I agree that he could not done it on his own and that is the whole point. Without the FBI there was no plot. Instead of cooking up the plot to entrap him, the FBI could have sent a couple of agents to talk to him, tell him that they were on to him and that he'd better shape up. That would likely have been the end of it. The fact that his search so quickly led him to the FBI tells me that it's not very likely at all that he would have found an actual terrorist. Moreover, if he had, it's far more likely that an actual terrorist would not have wanted to have anything to do with a wet behind the ears teenager whose inexperience could easily lead to mistakes that would expose him. If the kid had succeeded in finding an actual terrorist, that terrorist would probably have told the kid to go back to Somalia to fight jihad there. That scenario is far more realistic. It actually happens. And considering the fire bombing of the mosque that happened after the kid was arrested, actual terrorists in Oregon are of a very different stripe than the kind the kid was looking for.

Quote: Original post by MarkS
What people seem to be missing here is that up until the point of him committing an actual act, there was little to charge him with. At any prior point in the investigation, an arrest would have netted conspiracy charges at best and there would have been a very good chance that he wouldn't have been convicted of that.


Who is missing that point? That's the whole deal right there. Without the FBI there was no crime.

Quote: Original post by MarkS
Should the FBI use this tactic in every case? No, of course not! It wouldn't have worked in the 9/11 attack simply because of the complexity. However, I can see no fault in this in this or similar cases. A jury now will not have to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, simply because his actions left absolutely no doubt of his intent.


The FBI shouldn't use this tactic ever. Plain and simple. It's entrapment. The only point I can see in bringing up 9/11 is to emotionally cloud the argument. Take it easy there Rudy! As for the case against this, you're forgetting that the crucial meeting where he declared his intentions wasn't recorded. That's Greenwald's second point. His actions don't speak to the question of whether he was "independently predisposed" or whether he was pressured into them by overzealous FBI agents looking for publicity

Quote: Original post by MarkS
Something else that needs to be pointed out is that when the FBI does an investigation, they create a massive and meticulous paper trail. EVERYTHING has been documented from the initial contact from the informant to the time of the arrest, in detail. It would be asinine to expect law enforcement to share all of this information with the public. We have been fed just enough to know and nothing more. That is how it should be.


And yet in spite of that, the FBI failed to record the crucial conversation. So meticulous. Go figure eh? And don't forget that the FBI still had to file an affidavit for the arrest warrant for the kid. The USA isn't a complete police state yet. It will be interesting to see what comes out during the trial through the discovery process.

Quote: Original post by MarkS
Quote: Original post by LessBread
Quote: Original post by ibebrett
Quote: Original post by LessBread

It's impossible to conceive of Mohamud having achieved anything on his own. Before being ensnared by the FBI, the only tangible action he had taken was to write three articles on "fitness and jihad" for the online magazine Jihad Recollections. At least based on what is known, he had no history of violence, no apparent criminal record, had never been to a training camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else, and -- before meeting the FBI -- had never taken a single step toward harming anyone. Does that sound like some menacing sleeper Terrorist to you?
...


None of that matters, because he is a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition. He attempted to carry out a bomb plot up to the point of actually detonating a bomb. Having no criminal record prior to attempting murder means nothing.


Yes, none of that matters to a lynch mob. He was a 19 year old kid roped into a fictitious plot hatched by the FBI, not "a menacing sleeper terrorist by definition." Don't buy into the hysteria.

For contrast, here's what happens when the FBI targets an adult rather than an angry teenager. Their plot blows up in their face.

FBI plant banned by mosque – because he was too extreme (7 December 2010)

Quote:
...
The terror case Monteilh had been helping build against Ahmadullah Niazi, the brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden's bodyguard, collapsed in September, when the bungling informant revealed that his FBI handlers had instructed him to entrap his potential target and told him that "Islam is a threat to our national security".

Yesterday, as details of his efforts to persuade Niazi to blow up buildings became public, leading US Muslim organisations said they have suspended all contact with the FBI in protest against the excesses of agents who are secretly, and in some cases illegally, monitoring mosques.

"The community feels betrayed," Shakeel Syed, executive director of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California, an umbrella group of more than 75 mosques, told The Washington Post. "They got a guy, a bona fide criminal, and obviously trained him and sent him to infiltrate mosques... It's like a soap opera, for God's sake."

Monteilh, who had previously served time in prison for forgery, says he was recruited on his release in 2006 by FBI agents, who he met in doughnut shops and Starbucks outlets. After being given the code name "Oracle", he was told to root out radicals among the region's 500,000 practising Muslims.
...
In May 2007, Monteilh recorded a conversation in which he suggested to Niazi and another young man that they blow up buildings. Niazi appeared to agree with the idea, and the tape was subsequently used as evidence in the terror case against him.

However, it now seems that Niazi had simply been attempting to humour someone he regarded as a dangerous extremist. Indeed, he was so concerned by "al-Aziz's" attempts to plot an attack that he reported it to community leaders, who passed details to police and took out a restraining order to prevent him from entering the Islamic centre.
...


There's more about this here: Tension grows between Calif. Muslims, FBI after informant infiltrates mosque (December 5, 2010)


You are taking some mistakes by the FBI and some of its agents in some investigations as an indictment of the agency and its investigations as a whole. This argument is so absurd I simply will not comment on it further.


I'm establishing a pattern of how the FBI operates in these cases. If you want to ignore the pattern, fine, but the argument isn't the least bit absurd.

Here's another example: The Agent Who Might Have Saved Hamid Hayat

Here's more on several other examples: The Fear Factory
"I thought what I'd do was, I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes." - the Laughing Man
Quote: Original post by MarkS
If the FBI wasn't directing him, it is very much possible that he would have gotten a hold of someone that shared his beliefs and had the resources.


I think you shouldn't say "very much possible" in this case. It's highly unlikely for a 19 year old student to have connections to terrorists 5000 miles across the globe. Even if he knew how to reach a single connection there, why would this connection listen to him? What would the student write? "Hey guys I wanna blow something up for the cause! Send me $$$!"? It's not very easy to get these kinds of connections, and I'm glad it's not easy!

Besides, the FBI was already eavesdropping this student appearantly (by FBI statement), because he supposedly had contact with someone from the northern region of Pakistan. Appearantly this is already enough to get you red-flagged at Washington. Anyway, the FBI could have tracked this lead and follow up on that instead of creating their own plot. Maybe they would have gotten more information about the real terrorists. Somehow I doubt the contact in Pakistan was of any real value (maybe it was just a guy from his World of Warcraft guild, who knows).

So I don't understand what made the FBI setup this plot. This places serious doubt on the fact that this student was a real sleeper terrorist.

Anyway, the news is from a single source (and the story is unverifiable by any pleb) so it's inherently untrustworthy.

This topic is closed to new replies.

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